Claude Kolm
Claude Kolm
Yes, thank you. It was 5am when I wrote it (jetlag early rising). Fixed it, now.
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
originally posted by fatboy: teh dotster
I don't recognize the tone of my postings in the parts of your summary that I can interpret.
Quite curious! What/who is the "dotster", please?
. . . . . . Pete
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
I beg to disagree. They gave simple pleasures but were low in acidity and high in alcohol -- not what I look for in Burgundy.originally posted by fatboy:
while 2000 was initially underestimated, after its initial period of lumpy uncouthness it turned out to be a vintage that has consistently provided a delightful source of openhearted, always drinkable and surprisingly long lived hooch.
.
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
I do not consider it a failed or poor vintage or one that I refuse to drink, just one that is less interesting to me stylistically than the vintages surrounding it, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, which are where I put my money
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
...chandon de briailles: what a range, with idv being one of my desert island wines
originally posted by fatboy:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
I beg to disagree. They gave simple pleasures but were low in acidity and high in alcohol -- not what I look for in Burgundy.originally posted by fatboy:
while 2000 was initially underestimated, after its initial period of lumpy uncouthness it turned out to be a vintage that has consistently provided a delightful source of openhearted, always drinkable and surprisingly long lived hooch.
.
i'm all for pedantry for pedantry's sake, and this made a certain sense, even if it suggested that one had to have something of a plebeian palate to like wines from 2000.
but now you have modified your position.
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
I do not consider it a failed or poor vintage or one that I refuse to drink, just one that is less interesting to me stylistically than the vintages surrounding it, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, which are where I put my money
so let's go back to the point you have begged to disagree with, namely that 2000 is "a vintage that has consistently provided a delightful source of openhearted, always drinkable and surprisingly long lived hooch."
1998 - i love this vintage, but many wines were difficult to judge young, and lots and lots of them have spent many years showing weird and angular, such that i take on faith that many wines i have will turn out well on the back of the ugly duckings that have tuned into swans in recent years.
1999 - after an initial period of loveliness from maybe 2001-4, even the kindest examples turned stubborn and surly, and it is still too easy to open a bottle and think, "should have given it more time," even today.
2001 - i remember copping flack from several current and former members of teh bored for working my way through a six pack of gouges vaucrains in a matter of months when it was around six years old. i loved that shit, but i am a man who loves structure and sometimes digs teh hooch more for teh contemplative qualities than teh deliciousness. which is to say that, as a group, 01's were stern as fuck for a long, long time -- albeit, as i said, i have always kind of dug that.
2002 - meh. i've always found this vintage to be a tad foursquare and unstylish. one has always been able to drink it, i guess, but for most of the time it has been with us, i'd have thought who cares? again, time has been kind to these hooches.
all of which is to say that had i said, "oh, 2000, best eva xoxo," i might get the point of your disagreement. since i didn't, would you care to describe the set of 98, 99, 01 and 02's that have led you to conclude that these vintages have consistently provided a delightful source of openhearted, always drinkable and surprisingly long lived hooch?
fb.
Perhaps jeebaxi?originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
...chandon de briailles: what a range, with idv being one of my desert island wines
Specifically in '00 or more generically? Just thinking about future jebi*.
Mark Lipton
*assuming jebus to be a masculine second declension noun
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
...chandon de briailles: what a range, with idv being one of my desert island wines
Specifically in '00 or more generically? Just thinking about future jebi*.
Mark Lipton
*assuming jebus to be a masculine second declension noun
originally posted by Peater Cheasey:
originally posted by fatboy: teh dotster
I don't recognize the tone of my postings in the parts of your summary that I can interpret.
Quite curious! What/who is the "dotster", please?
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
as always, it could be dumb luck but off the top of my head chevillon, gouges, d'angerville, rousseau, drouhin, lafarge made gorgeous 00s that show well to this day. then there is chandon de briailles: what a range, with idv being one of my desert island wines
originally posted by Tom Blach:
I do think that both 98 and 01 are showing signs of not lasting as well as 00, however, which I find very surprising indeed.
originally posted by fatboy:
originally posted by Tom Blach:
I do think that both 98 and 01 are showing signs of not lasting as well as 00, however, which I find very surprising indeed.
if you'll forgive teh drift, this raised in my mind another dimension to these shits when it comes to burgundy, namely teh bottle size.
for me teh predictability of teh development of magnums from bottles has to be the worst of losers games with teh burgundy, to the extent that in only a surprisingly few years -- 85, 87, 92 and 00 come to mind but i'm sure there are more -- can i think of there being any real information from teh development of the one from the other.
which is to say i find i still have magnums of 98s and 01s (and, ulp!, 83s, 86s, 93s, 95s etc) simply on the basis of my having been bitten hard by falsely projecting the state of teh bottles (all long since gone) to teh girthier compatriots.
i begin to suspect that, as you suggest, some of these -- teh 98s espec -- may not survive my ignore and hope strategy forever, and may be heading for a less than graceful decline. will stand some up and report.
fb.
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
wasn't 01 quite (what's the pc word?) diverse, at least in terms of raw material, leading to the question of how fanatical the sorting may have been from house to house? with 98 you kind of know what you are getting, so far.
originally posted by fatboy:
being teh fathead, i bought few 00s initially. why would i? i had loaded up on teh vintage of teh century 99s.
fb.
originally posted by fatboy:
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
as always, it could be dumb luck but off the top of my head chevillon, gouges, d'angerville, rousseau, drouhin, lafarge made gorgeous 00s that show well to this day. then there is chandon de briailles: what a range, with idv being one of my desert island wines
being teh fathead, i bought few 00s initially. why would i? i had loaded up on teh vintage of teh century 99s. in teh case of idv, the wine from rollin was teh one that seemed perfect out of teh gate. i still have several bottles of same. suffice it to say that i eye them with some trepidation when i am in teh fatcave, and teh last of teh diminishing stock, 2? years ago -- was filed away under stubborn, surly and wait!!
for whatever reason (was i flush at teh time?) i went large on rollin's fichot too. see above.
fb.
originally posted by fatboy:
. in teh case of idv, the wine from rollin was teh one that seemed perfect out of teh gate. i still have several bottles of same. suffice it to say that i eye them with some trepidation when i am in teh fatcave, and teh last of teh diminishing stock, 2? years ago -- was filed away under stubborn, surly and wait!!
for whatever reason (was i flush at teh time?) i went large on rollin's fichot too. see above.
fb.
originally posted by Jay Miller:
My last 99 I’ve showed similarly much to my disappointment. I honk about 4? Years ago. My remaining bottle,is regarded,with equal trepidation.